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7-letter words containing nk

  • hunkers — to squat on one's heels (often followed by down).
  • i think — You use 'I think' as a way of being polite when you are explaining or suggesting to someone what you want to do, or when you are accepting or refusing an offer.
  • icerink — Alternative spelling of ice rink.
  • ink bag — a gland near the anus of an octopus or related mollusc that holds fluid ejected into the water for self-concealment
  • ink jet — a method of printing streams of electrically charged ink
  • ink pad — block saturated with ink
  • ink sac — a large gland in most cephalopods, as the cuttlefish, octopus, and squid, that is near the rectum and ejects ink at predators.
  • ink-cap — any of several saprotrophic agaricaceous fungi of the genus Coprinus, whose caps disintegrate into a black inky fluid after the spores mature. It includes the shaggy ink-cap (Coprinus comatus), also called lawyer's wig, a distinctive fungus having a white cylindrical cap covered with shaggy white or brownish scales
  • inkatha — a South African Zulu organization founded by Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi in 1975 as a paramilitary group seeking nonracial democracy; won four seats in South Africa's first nonracial elections in 1994
  • inkblot — A blot of ink.
  • inkfish — (colloquial) cuttlefish.
  • inkhorn — a small container of horn or other material, formerly used to hold writing ink.
  • inkhosi — Alternative spelling of inkosi.
  • inkless — without ink; not using ink
  • inklike — Resembling ink.
  • inkling — a slight suggestion or indication; hint; intimation: They hadn't given us an inkling of what was going to happen.
  • inkspot — an ink stain; spot of ink
  • inkster — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • inkwell — a small container for ink.
  • inkwood — a tropical tree, Exothea paniculata, of the soapberry family, yielding a hard, reddish-brown wood.
  • jenkins — Roy (Harris), Baron Jenkins of Hillhead. 1920–2003, British politician and author; Labour home secretary (1965–67, 1974–76) and chancellor of the exchequer (1967–70); president of the European Commission (1977–80); cofounder of the Social Democratic Party (1981); leader of party (1982–83); Chancellor of Oxford University (1987–2003)
  • jinkies — Indication of surprise or amazement.
  • junkers — a member of a class of aristocratic landholders, especially in East Prussia, strongly devoted to militarism and authoritarianism, from among whom the German military forces recruited a large number of its officers.
  • junkets — Plural form of junket.
  • junkier — of the nature of junk; trashy.
  • junkies — Plural form of junkie.
  • junking — Present participle of junk.
  • junkman — a dealer in resalable used metal, paper, rags, and other junk.
  • kinkaid — Thomas Cassin [kas-in] /ˈkæs ɪn/ (Show IPA), 1888–1972, U.S. admiral.
  • kinkier — full of kinks; closely twisted: a kinky wire.
  • kinkily — In a kinky manner.
  • kinking — a twist or curl, as in a thread, rope, wire, or hair, caused by its doubling or bending upon itself.
  • klunker — clunker (def 2).
  • konkani — a dialect of Marathi spoken in coastal Maharashtra in western India.
  • konking — Present participle of konk.
  • lankier — Comparative form of lanky.
  • lankily — In a lanky manner; in the manner of a lanky person.
  • link up — connect
  • linkage — the act of linking; state or manner of being linked.
  • linkboy — Male servant or other attendant (regardless of age), employed to bear a torch or other light abroad at night.
  • linkers — Plural form of linker.
  • linking — Connecting or joining something to something else.
  • linkman — Adult linkboy; one bearing a torch or light.
  • linkmen — Plural form of linkman.
  • linkrot — the condition of a website link not being updated, with the result that the host website is no longer hyperlinked to the desired website
  • linkups — Plural form of linkup.
  • lunkers — Plural form of lunker.
  • lysenko — Trofim Denisovich [truh-fyeem dyi-nyee-suh-vyich] /trʌˈfyim dyɪˈnyi sə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1898–1976, Russian biologist and agronomist.
  • macdink — /mak'dink/ To make many incremental and unnecessary cosmetic changes to a program or file. Often the subject of the macdinking would be better off without them. The Macintosh is said to encourage such behaviour. See also fritterware, window shopping.
  • malinke — a member of an agricultural people living in Senegal, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, and Ivory Coast.
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